Abstract

Crohn’s disease (CD) is a debilitating inflammatory bowel condition of unknown aetiology that is growing in prevalence globally. Large-scale studies have determined associations between female obesity or low body mass index (BMI) with risk of CD at all ages or 8– < 40 years, respectively. For males, low BMI entering adult life is associated with increased incidence of CD or ulcerative colitis up to 40 years later. Body composition analysis has shown that combinations of lean tissue loss and high visceral fat predict poor CD outcomes. Here, we assessed dietary intake, physical activity and whole or regional body composition of patients with CD relapse or remission. This anthropometric approach found people with CD, irrespective of relapse or remission, differed from a large representative healthy population sample in exhibiting elevated gynoid fat and reduced android fat. CD is associated with mesenteric adipose tissue, or “creeping fat”, that envelops affected intestine exclusive of other tissue; that fat is localised to the android region of the body. In this context, CD mesenteric adiposity represents a stark juxtaposition of organ-specific and regional adiposity. Although our study population was relatively small, we suggest tentatively that there is a rationale to refer to Crohn’s disease as a fatty intestine condition, akin to fatty liver conditions. We suggest that our data provide early insight into a subject that potentially warrants further investigation across a larger patient cohort.

Highlights

  • Crohn’s disease (CD) is a debilitating inflammatory bowel condition of unknown aetiology that is growing in prevalence globally

  • In a cohort of patients in either relapse or remission we further aimed to evaluate the influence of dietary intake and physical activity on their body composition, determined through whole body analysis and an innovative approach to regional body composition

  • The full patient cohort was compared with the general healthy Irish population reflected in the University of Limerick Body Composition Cohort (ULBC)

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Summary

Introduction

Crohn’s disease (CD) is a debilitating inflammatory bowel condition of unknown aetiology that is growing in prevalence globally. Large-scale studies have determined associations between female obesity or low body mass index (BMI) with risk of CD at all ages or 8– < 40 years, respectively. Retrospective analysis of body mass index (BMI) records, notably even at population levels, has determined associations between female obesity or low BMI with risk of Crohn’s disease (CD) at all ages or 8– < 40 years, ­respectively[1]. Far more accurate measurement of whole body and regional body composition can be provided by the 3-component (fat, lean and bone) model of body composition generated by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) Such 3-component modelling of body composition has provided normative population d­ ata[7], for ­athletes[8] and for patient specific reference data: e.g., ­osteoporosis[9] and ­diabetes[10]. As lean muscle mass has been shown to be of more importance than fat mass in determining bone density, the observed loss of lean muscle mass in CD cohorts could have a significant impact on bone h­ ealth[16]

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